Results for 'Lisa Dercks'

941 found
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  1.  26
    The european commission's business ethics: A critique of proposed reforms.Lisa Dercks - 2001 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 10 (4):346–359.
    This paper discusses the reform of the European Commission in the wake of the mass resignations of March 1999. It places reform in the framework of the global business ethics movement by making the case for business ethics in government. It examines the Committee of Independent Experts’ report as well as the Commission’s White Paper on reform. It argues that effective Commission reform is not possible without fundamental culture change, and puts forward thirteen recommendations that, if implemented, are calculated to (...)
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  2. The Correspondence Between Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia and René Descartes.Lisa Shapiro (ed.) - 2007 - University of Chicago Press.
    Between the years 1643 and 1649, Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia and René Descartes exchanged fifty-eight letters—thirty-two from Descartes and twenty-six from Elisabeth. Their correspondence contains the only known extant philosophical writings by Elisabeth, revealing her mastery of metaphysics, analytic geometry, and moral philosophy, as well as her keen interest in natural philosophy. The letters are essential reading for anyone interested in Descartes’s philosophy, in particular his account of the human being as a union of mind and body, as well as (...)
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  3.  10
    Movement Matters! Understanding the Developmental Trajectory of Embodied Planning.Lisa Musculus, Azzurra Ruggeri & Markus Raab - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Human motor skills are exceptional compared to other species, no less than their cognitive skills. In this perspective paper, we suggest that “movement matters!,” implying that motor development is a crucial driving force of cognitive development, much more impactful than previously acknowledged. Thus, we argue that to fully understand and explain developmental changes, it is necessary to consider the interaction of motor and cognitive skills. We exemplify this argument by introducing the concept of “embodied planning,” which takes an embodied cognition (...)
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  4.  53
    Open questions and a proposal: A critical review of the evidence on infant numerical abilities.Lisa Cantrell & Linda B. Smith - 2013 - Cognition 128 (3):331-352.
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  5. Cartesian Generosity.Lisa Shapiro - 1999 - Acta Philosophica Fennica 64:249-276.
     
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  6. Patient Advocacy in Clinical Ethics Consultation.Lisa M. Rasmussen - 2012 - American Journal of Bioethics 12 (8):1 - 9.
    The question of whether clinical ethics consultants may engage in patient advocacy in the course of consultation has not been addressed, but it highlights for the field that consultants? allegiances, and the boundaries of appropriate professional practice, must be better understood. I consider arguments for and against patient advocacy in clinical ethics consultation, which demonstrate that patient advocacy is permissible, but not central to the practice of consultation. I then offer four recommendations for consultants who engage in patient advocacy, and (...)
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  7.  43
    Ethical challenges in online research: Public/private perceptions.Lisa Sugiura, Rosemary Wiles & Catherine Pope - 2016 - Research Ethics 13 (3-4):184-199.
    With its wealth of readily and often publicly available information about Web users’ lives, the Web has created new opportunities for conducting online research. Although digital data are easily accessible, ethical guidelines are inconsistent about how researchers should use them. Some academics claim that traditional ethical principles are sufficient and applicable to online research. However, the Web poses new challenges that compel researchers to reconsider concerns of consent, privacy and anonymity. Based on doctoral research into the investigation of online medicine (...)
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  8.  23
    Raising the Stakes in the Ultimatum Game: Experimental Evidence from Indonesia, 37 ECON.Lisa A. Cameron - 1999 - Economic Inquiry 37 (1).
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  9. Rebuttal analogy and need for cognition individual differences and rebuttal analogy in persuasive messages: Effect of need for cognition.Bryan B. Whaley, Lisa Smith Wagner, Kathleen E. Cook & Natalie Jeha - 2002 - Communication and Cognition. Monographies 35 (3-4):193-209.
     
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  10.  59
    Domain-specific and domain-general processes underlying metacognitive judgments.Lisa M. Fitzgerald, Mahnaz Arvaneh & Paul M. Dockree - 2017 - Consciousness and Cognition 49:264-277.
  11.  87
    Genetics, commodification, and social justice in the globalization era.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2001 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 11 (3):221-238.
    : he commercialization of biotechnology, especially research and development by transnational pharmaceutical companies, is already excessive and is increasingly dangerous to distributive justice, human rights, and access of marginal populations to basic human goods. Focusing on gene patenting, this article employs the work of Margaret Jane Radin and others to argue that gene patenting ought to be more highly regulated and that it ought to be regulated with international participation and in view of concerns about solidarity and the common good. (...)
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  12.  35
    Farm to school in British Columbia: mobilizing food literacy for food sovereignty.Lisa Jordan Powell & Hannah Wittman - 2018 - Agriculture and Human Values 35 (1):193-206.
    Farm to school programs have been positioned as interventions that can support goals of the global food sovereignty movement, including strengthening local food production systems, improving food access and food justice for urban populations, and reducing distancing between producers and consumers. However, there has been little assessment of how and to what extent farm to school programs can actually function as a mechanism leading to the achievement of food sovereignty. As implemented in North America, farm to school programs encompass activities (...)
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  13.  8
    Familial Coercion to Participate in Genetic Family Studies: Is There Cause for IRB Intervention?Lisa S. Parker & Charles W. Lidz - 1994 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 16 (1/2):6.
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  14.  24
    Who are the humanities for? Decolonizing the humanities.Lisa L. Stenmark - 2021 - Zygon 56 (3):718-731.
    Drees makes a strong case for the importance of the humanities in the university, providing an excellent resource for anyone in the Western Academy. Its usefulness for those who want to work outside the West is limited, however, because he does not engage with literature that challenges its methods and disciplines. If we are to have a positive global impact, we need to do more than clarify existing boundaries, we need to blur them, beginning with an examination of inherent biases (...)
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  15.  16
    Under duress: Community and individual as solace and escape in the Middle East.Lisa Anderson - 2021 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 47 (4):512-521.
    Examination of the fluidity of communal and individual identity in the Middle East and North Africa suggests that such identities are not stable, singular or mutually exclusive but shaped by circumstances, particularly political and economic duress. An approach that adopts the uncertainty principle of quantum mechanics may be more productive in understanding identity politics in the region and in general.
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  16.  32
    C. Tyler DesRoches, Frank Jankunis and Byron Williston (eds), Canadian Environmental Philosophy.Lisa Kretz - 2021 - Environmental Values 30 (2):261-263.
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  17.  48
    ‘The Poor Man's Son’ and the Corruption of Our Moral Sentiments: Commerce, Virtue and Happiness in Adam Smith.Hill Lisa - 2017 - Journal of Scottish Philosophy 15 (1):9-25.
    In order to operate effectively, modern capitalism depends on agents who evince a rather morally undemanding type of moral character; one that is acquisitive, pecuniary, recognition-seeking and merely prudent. Adam Smith is considered to have been the key legitimiser of this archetype. In this paper I respond to the view that Smith is actually sceptical about the value of material acquisition and explore whether he really believed that the pursuit of tranquillity and virtue—especially beneficence—offers a superior route to happiness than (...)
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  18.  56
    The DSM, big pharma, and clinical practice guidelines: Protecting patient autonomy and informed consent.Lisa Cosgrove - 2011 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 4 (1):11-25.
    The author of this paper discusses why the issue of financial conflicts of interest in psychiatry has important public health implications for women and why FCOI complicate the informed consent process. For example, when psychiatric diagnostic and treatment guidelines are unduly influenced by industry, informed consent becomes a critical issue, because women may be assigned diagnostic labels that are not valid and may also be receiving imbalanced or even inaccurate information about their mental health treatment options. However, mere disclosure of (...)
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  19.  53
    Renegotiating Aquinas.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2015 - Journal of Religious Ethics 43 (2):193-217.
    While Roman Catholic feminist ethicists typically endorse moral realism and crosscultural standards of justice, they also have been influenced by the postmodern interrogation of abstract reason and moral universalism. As theologians writing after the Second Vatican Council, they are increasingly sensitive to the communal and ecclesial dimensions of morality and of Christian ethics, and to the integral relation of Christian faith and ethics. This essay will consider two approaches to Catholic feminist ethics that differ in the relative weight they give (...)
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  20. The Metaphysics of Gender and Sexual Difference.Jean Keller & Lisa Schwartzman - unknown
    “It is certainly true, as nominalists have been concerned to acknowledge, that judgements about kinds are determined in part by human interests, projects, and practices. But the possibility that human interests, projects, and practices sometimes develop as they do because the real (physical or social) world is as it is suggests that this sort of dependence is not by itself an argument against essentialism.” -Susan Babbitt (1996, 146).
     
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  21. Building Better Societies: Promoting Social Justice in a World Falling Apart.Rowland Atkinson, Lisa Mckenzie & Simon Winlow - 2017
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  22. Living, local, wild waters : into baptismal reality.Lisa E. Dahill - 2018 - In Trevor George Hunsberger Bechtel, Matthew Eaton & Timothy Harvie (eds.), Encountering earth: thinking theologically with a more-than-human world. Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books.
     
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  23. Critical Indigenous Philosophy: Disciplinary Challenges Posed by African and Native American Epistemologies.Jennifer Lisa Vest - 2000 - Dissertation, University of California, Berkeley
    In this thesis, I examine recent proposals for the creation of African and Native American forms of Indigenous philosophy and show how the discussions and debates in these fields challenge the disciplinary boundaries of modern Academic Western philosophy. With regard to African philosophy, I critique the debates in the Anglophone literature, teasing out those aspects of the debates which pose substantial epistemological challenges to mainstream [Western] philosophy, focusing, in particular, on assumptions about the intersections between philosophy, culture, science, and universality (...)
     
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  24.  54
    Engineering, gerrymandering and expertise in public bioethics.Lisa M. Rasmussen - 2006 - HEC Forum 18 (2):125-130.
  25.  50
    The Case of Vipul Bhrigu and the Federal Definition of Research Misconduct.Lisa M. Rasmussen - 2014 - Science and Engineering Ethics 20 (2):411-421.
    The Office of Research Integrity found in 2011 that Vipul Bhrigu, a postdoctoral researcher who sabotaged a colleague’s research materials, was guilty of misconduct. However, I argue that this judgment is ill-considered and sets a problematic precedent for future cases. I first discuss the current federal definition of research misconduct and representative cases of research misconduct. Then, because this case recalls a debate from the 1990s over what the definition of “research misconduct” ought to be, I briefly recapitulate that history (...)
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  26.  66
    Higher-Order Beliefs and the Undermining Problem for Bayesianism.Lisa Cassell - 2019 - Acta Analytica 34 (2):197-213.
    Jonathan Weisberg has argued that Bayesianism’s rigid updating rules make Bayesian updating incompatible with undermining defeat. In this paper, I argue that when we attend to the higher-order beliefs we must ascribe to agents in the kinds of cases Weisberg considers, the problem he raises disappears. Once we acknowledge the importance of higher-order beliefs to the undermining story, we are led to a different understanding of how these cases arise. And on this different understanding of things, the rigid nature of (...)
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  27.  30
    Biotech and Justice: Catching up with the Real World Order.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2003 - Hastings Center Report 33 (5):34-44.
    Social policy questions in the U.S. are often framed in terms of individual rights, valorizing individual freedom and self‐determination. But this focus obscures the social and economic bases of health and disease. U.S. bioethics, as its counterparts in Africa and Asia have done, needs to restructure its philosophical framework and expand its moral criteria to consider how to define a global ethics.
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  28.  22
    Rethinking the “crisis of expertise”: a relational approach.Lisa Stampnitzky - 2023 - Theory and Society 52 (6):1097-1124.
    Concerns about a “crisis of expertise” have been raised recently in both scholarship and public debate. This article asks why there is such a widespread perception that expertise is in crisis, and why this “crisis” has posed such a difficult puzzle for sociology to explain. It argues that what has been interpreted as a crisis is better understood as a transformation: the dissolution of a regime of expertise organized around practices of social integration, and its displacement by a new regime (...)
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  29.  21
    Levinas's Humanism of the Other and King Lear.Lisa S. Starks - 2022 - Levinas Studies 16:75-92.
    Levinas’s Humanism of the Other may be seen as a meditation of King Lear. His philosophy offers what a critique of traditional and modern anti-humanism urgently needs: an ethics that precedes being. It provides a necessary ethical foundation needed to investigate questions of the human and humanity that Shakespeare examines so thoroughly in this powerful tragedy. Prefiguring Levinas’s later philosophy, Shakespeare dramatizes this humanism of the other through the suffering and vulnerability of the body. Lear’s and Gloucester’s parallel journeys are (...)
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  30. Michael Neth.Lisa M. Steinman - 2004 - The European Legacy 9 (5):649-653.
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  31.  13
    On the potentials of interaction breakdowns for HRI.Britta Wrede, Anna-Lisa Vollmer & Sören Krach - 2023 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e49.
    How do we switch between “playing along” and treating robots as technical agents? We propose interaction breakdowns to help solve this “social artifact puzzle”: Breaks cause changes from fluid interaction to explicit reasoning and interaction with the raw artifact. These changes are closely linked to understanding the technical architecture and could be used to design better human–robot interaction (HRI).
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  32.  60
    The Declaration of Helsinki through a feminist lens.Lisa Eckenwiler, Dafna Feinholz, Carolyn Ells & Toby Schonfeld - 2008 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 1 (1):161-177.
    This commentary was submitted to the World Medical Association on behalf of the International Network on Feminist Approaches to Bioethics. Our submission included a description of feminist research ethics, suggestions for specific revisions to the Declaration, and elements found in other international research ethics codes that are important from a feminist perspective. Our goals were to encourage the WMA to craft a declaration that: conceptualizes issues of vulnerability in richer and more nuanced ways, resists the influence of profit motives, and (...)
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  33.  54
    (1 other version)The self-knowledge that externalists leave out.Lisa L. Hall - 1998 - Southwest Philosophy Review 14 (2):115-123.
  34.  17
    Feminist Academics and the Stimulus Package: A Report from the Field.Eileen Boris & Lisa Levenstein - 2009 - Feminist Studies 35 (1):204-209.
  35.  36
    Unconscious processing of arabic numerals in unilateral neglect.Marinella Cappelletti & Lisa Cipolotti - 2006 - Neuropsychologia 44 (10):1999-2006.
  36.  91
    Theology and bioethics: Should religious traditions have a public voice?Lisa Sowle Cahill - 1992 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 17 (3):263-272.
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  37.  20
    Trust Architectures in Research.Lisa M. Rasmussen - 2023 - Res Philosophica 100 (4):497-514.
    The research enterprise depends on trust, especially trust in data reliability and ethical conduct of research. This trust is accomplished via systems, or “architectures,” that do the work of ensuring trustworthiness in research when individuals are not able to assess it for themselves. In the United States and many other countries, national laws or regulations constitute the research ethics trust architecture. But new research methods, such as citizen science, DIY biology, biohacking, or corporate research, avoid such regulations because they draw (...)
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  38.  62
    Descartes and Spinoza on the Primitive Passions.Lisa Shapiro - 2019 - In Noa Naaman Zauderer (ed.), Freedom Action and Motivation in Spinoza's Ethics. New York, NY: Routledge Press. pp. 62-81.
    Motivating my discussion is a puzzle in Spinoza’s account of the primary affects – his shift away from adopting Descartes’s list of six primitive passions in the Short Treatise to the three primary affects in the Ethics. I lay out this puzzle in Section 1. In Section 2, I approach this puzzle by considering the taxonomy offered by Descartes of the basic or primitive passions. In considering Descartes, I will also briefly consider Aquinas’s view since Descartes positions himself as rejecting (...)
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  39.  33
    Ethics Centers’ Conflicts of Interest and the Failure of Disclosure to Remedy this Endemic Problem in advance.Lisa S. Parker - forthcoming - Teaching Ethics.
  40.  39
    Set size, individuation, and attention to shape.Lisa Cantrell & Linda B. Smith - 2013 - Cognition 126 (2):258-267.
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  41.  25
    'Abortion Pill' RU 486: Ethics, Rhetoric, and Social Practice.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 1987 - Hastings Center Report 17 (5):5-8.
    RU 486, an experimental drug to terminate early pregnancy, raises again the fundamental questions about the status of the early embryo: What are the morally relevant similarities and differences among contraception, early abortion and late abortion? And how does language affect both our social practices and attitudes concerning those social practices?
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  42.  55
    Catholics and Health Care.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2010 - Journal of Catholic Social Thought 7 (1):29-49.
  43.  40
    Holland, Suzanne, Karen Lebacqz, and Laurie Zoloth, eds. The Human Embryonic Stem Cell Debate: Science, Ethics, and Public Policy.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2002 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 2 (3):559-562.
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  44.  82
    Sex, Marriage, and Community in Christian Ethics.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 1983 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 58 (1):72-81.
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  45.  85
    Appealing to Multiple Intelligences in the Classroom.Lisa Cassidy - 2007 - Teaching Philosophy 30 (3):293-308.
    This article urges teachers of philosophy to “remember Meno’s slave boy.” In Plato’s Meno, Socrates famously uses a stick to draw figures in the dust, andMeno’s uneducated slave boy (with some prompting by Socrates) grasps geometry. Plato uses this interaction to show that all learning is, in fact, recollection. Regardless of the merits of that position, Socrates’ conversation with the slave boy is an excellent demonstration that understanding is aided by appealing to the different talents or “intelligences” of students. Similarly, (...)
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  46.  23
    Grief at Work: The Death of a Beloved Colleague Is a Loss Publicly and Privately Felt.Lisa Cassidy - 2022 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 15 (1):150-151.
    My best friend Bernard died a few weeks ago after a long illness. We worked in adjacent offices teaching philosophy at our public state college for eighteen years. Bernard could simultaneously discuss Descartes's Third Meditation and cook you the perfect souffle while tossing scraps to his miniature poodle. He was a man of deep understanding, empathy, and humor. All who knew him were blessed.But the fact that I was Bernard's colleague, and nominally his chair, means my private grief is public.One (...)
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  47.  31
    Nine Ideas for Including a Civic Engagement Theme in an Informal Logic Course.Lisa Cassidy - 2018 - American Association of Philosophy Teachers Studies in Pedagogy 4:100-115.
    A class in informal logic can be an opportunity to do more than just cover the basic material of the subject. Critical Thinking can also foster civic engagement as experiential learning—in the course’s readings, assignments, in-class activities and discussions, and tests. I favor an inclusive understanding of civic engagement: the course theme is engaging with the concerns of the civis. The argument made throughout here is that the civic engagement theme is a way of doing experiential learning in informal logic. (...)
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  48.  76
    Thoughts on the Bioethics of Estranged Biological Kin.Lisa Cassidy - 2013 - Hypatia 28 (1):32-48.
    This paper considers the bioethics of estranged biological kin, who are biologically related people not in contact with one another (due to adoption, abandonment, or other long-term estrangement). Specifically, I am interested in what is owed to estranged biological kin in the event of medical need. A survey of current bioethics demonstrates that most analyses are not prepared to reckon with the complications of having or being estranged biological kin. For example, adoptees might wonder if a lack of contact with (...)
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  49.  47
    Ethical Dimensions of Disparities in Depression Research and Treatment in the Pharmacogenomic Era.Lisa S. Parker & Valerie B. Satkoske - 2012 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (4):886-903.
    Personalized medicine with its promise of developing interventions tailored to an individual's health need and genetically related response to treatment might seem a promising antidote to the documented underutilization of standard depression treatments by African Americans. In addition, understanding depression not merely in biochemical terms but also in genetic terms might seem to counter cultural beliefs and stigma that attach to depression when conceived as a mood or behavioral problem under an individual's control. After all, if there is one thing (...)
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  50.  17
    H. Tristram Engelhardt, jr.Lisa M. Rasmussen - 2002 - In Kazumasa Hoshino, H. Tristram Engelhardt & Lisa M. Rasmussen (eds.), Bioethics and moral content: national traditions of health care morality: papers dedicated in tribute to Kazumasa Hoshino. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 3--1.
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